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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a complicated clinicopathological entity with clustering of cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors, which includes central
obesity
, hypertension, dyslipidemia and glucose intolerance. There were many studies investigating a wide variety of clinical and pathophysiological aspects of this syndrome. However, the cutoffs of the components of MetS are not yet being evaluated by measured the insulin resistance (IR) directly. In this study, we enrolled 564 (male/female: 250/314) middle-aged healthy subjects. Each of the male and the female group was further divided into four subgroups (group 1 to group 4). Group 4 had the top 25 percentile of most severe IR determined by insulin suppression test. We then obtain the mean values of each component of the MetS in group 4 and compared them with the definitions of World Health Organization, National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III, European Study Group of Insulin Resistance and International Diabetes Federation. The means of the blood pressure (BP) (male, 125/81; female, 125/80 mmHg) and the triglyceride (TG) (male, 1.6; female, 1.4 mmol/l) in group 4 were lower, and the fasting plasma glucose (6.2 mmol/l) was higher than the cutoffs of the other four sets of the criteria. The means of the high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (male, 0.9; female, 1.03 mmol/l) and the body mass index (male, 26.9; female 26.1 kg/m(2)) in group 4 were consistent with the cutoffs of other four groups and also the Taiwan Health Department criteria. In conclusion, we suggest to lower the cutoffs of the BP from 140/90 to 125/80 mmHg, TG from 1.7 to 1.6 mmol/l for males and 1.4 mmol/l for females for MetS definition, at least in Taiwan. This may help to early detect subjects under high risk of future coronary heart disease and diabetes.
Still
, these newly proposed cutoffs need larger-scale epidemiological studies to confirm.
...
PMID:The relationships between insulin resistance and components of metabolic syndrome in Taiwanese Asians. 1635 72
The pressure to regulate the marketing of high-energy, nutrient-poor foods to young people has been mounting in light of concern about rising worldwide levels of overweight and
obesity
. In 2004, the World Health Organization called on governments, industry, and civil society to act to reduce unhealthy marketing messages. Since then, important changes have taken place in the global regulatory environment regarding the marketing of food to young people. Industry has developed self-regulatory approaches, civil society has campaigned for statutory restrictions, and governments have dealt with a range of regulatory proposals.
Still
, there have been few new regulations that restrict food marketing to young people. Despite calls for evidence-based policy, new regulatory developments appear to have been driven less by evidence than by ethics.
...
PMID:Regulating and litigating in the public interest: regulating food marketing to young people worldwide: trends and policy drivers. 1790 36
Human (visceral)
obesity
is associated with alterations hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis functioning. It is however not completely clear whether the HPA axis is causally or co-incidentally related to (visceral)
obesity
. This review summarizes supporting data of an involvement of the HPA axis in the development of (visceral)
obesity
. First, several DNA polymorphisms related to HPA axis functioning are correlated to the development of
obesity
. Second, chronic elevation of circulatory glucocorticoid concentrations, as in Cushing's disease, results in increased abdominal adiposity. Third, (visceral)
obesity
is associated with a diminished capacity of cortisol to suppress its own secretion. HPA axis functioning might affect energy balance through affecting energy intake. Both CRH and cortisol influence physiological, central mechanisms involved in the regulation of food intake.
Still
, general activation of the HPA axis has shown to have inconsistent effects on food intake in humans. This inconsistency may partially be explained by gender differences, individual differences in the functioning of the HPA axis, as well as differences in attitude towards eating. In particular, women with high scores on dietary restraint are prone to stress-induced hyperphagia. Dietary restraint scores, in turn, are positively correlated to basal and dexamethasone-suppressed cortisol levels, indicating a complex dual relationship between stress, HPA axis functioning, attitude towards eating and the risk for stress-induced hyperphagia. In the Western society, with chronically high ambient levels of stress and the availability of high caloric foods, this relationship may imply a risk for the development of (visceral)
obesity
and the metabolic syndrome.
...
PMID:The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal-axis in the regulation of energy balance. 1827 77
Athletes have traditionally been considered greater risk takers than their peers. Some research suggests that athletic participation is associated with increased risk behaviors in males but may be protective in females.
Still
there is significant intersport variability, and some "nonathlete" risk behaviors exceed those of athletes. Motor vehicle accidents, sensation-seeking behaviors that contribute to unintentional injury and violence, alcohol, illicit drug and tobacco use, sexual misadventure, unhealthy dietary habits, and physical inactivity and
obesity
are major health risk considerations. There is new focus upon the negative health-related consequences of other risk behaviors such as gambling, sleep apnea and
obesity
, inappropriate medication, energy drink or contaminated supplement use, and depression/suicide. While it is important to look at the prevalence of "risk behaviors in sport," our cautions regarding these behaviors need to be shared with all youth regardless of athletic disposition.
...
PMID:Risk behaviors in high school and college sport. 1900 60
The goal of nutrigenomics is to develop nutritional interventions targeted to individual genetic make-up.
Obesity
is a prime candidate for nutrigenomics research. Personalized approaches to prevention of diseases associated with
obesity
may be available in the near future. Nevertheless, in the context of limited resources, access to a nutrigenomics personalized health service raises questions around equity. Using focus groups, the present qualitative research study provides empirical data on ethical concerns and values surrounding the nutrigenomics-guided personalized nutrition for
obesity
prevention. Eight focus groups were convened including 27 healthy individuals and 21 individuals who self-identified as obese or at risk of
obesity
. The transcripts of the focus group were analyzed according to the qualitative method of grounded theory. Responsibility, reciprocity, and solidarity emerged as the key ethical criteria perceived by the respondents to be significant in terms of how health professionals should determine access to personalized nutrition services.
Still
, exclusion of individuals from specific nutrigenomic services is likely to conflict with the imperatives of medical deontology and contemporary social consensus. The representation of equity in this paper is novel: it considers the intersection of nutrigenomics and personalized nutritional interventions specifically in the context of limited public resources for health services.
...
PMID:Socio-ethical analysis of equity in access to nutrigenomics interventions for obesity prevention: a focus group study. 1904 Mar 73
Obesity
is a major risk factor for endometrial cancer.
Still
, the association of
obesity
-related metabolic factors, such as serum lipids and lipoprotein levels, is unclear. We prospectively examined the association of serum levels of triglycerides, total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, non-high-density lipoprotein (non-HDL), and HDL cholesterol with endometrial cancer risk among 31,473 women. During 9 years of follow-up, 100 cases of endometrial cancer were identified by linkage to the Cancer Registry of Norway. There was a positive association of serum triglyceride levels with endometrial cancer risk. Comparing the highest to the lowest quartile of triglycerides, the age-adjusted hazard ratio was 2.34 (95% CI: 1.04-5.28), and further adjustment for body mass index attenuated the association (hazard ratio 1.79, 95% CI: 0.79-4.05). For total serum cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and HDL cholesterol there were no associations with endometrial cancer risk, either without or after adjustment for body mass index. Serum triglyceride levels were positively associated with the risk of endometrial cancer, and some of the association seems to be attributable to
obesity
. Apart from higher estrogen levels produced in adipose tissue, mechanisms more specifically related to triglycerides may also be involved in endometrial cancer. Further prospective studies on this subject are needed to better understand the association of blood lipids with endometrial cancer risk.
...
PMID:Serum lipids and endometrial cancer risk: results from the HUNT-II study. 1926 7
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease or NAFLD is a chronic liver condition characterized by hepatic steatosis and associated with insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). In many patients fat accumulation leads to steatohepatitis (NASH) with chronic necrosis, inflammation, and fibrosis, and eventually to the development of cirrhosis.
Obese
and T2DM patients are at the greatest risk for NASH and progressive disease. New diagnostic techniques, such as magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy (MRS), have enhanced our way to non-invasively quantify liver fat and suggest that the epidemic of NAFLD is much larger than previously believed. However, the diagnosis of NAFLD for clinicians remains difficult due to a number of factors: limited awareness, non-specific symptoms, few laboratory findings, and the need for a liver biopsy to confirm the diagnosis. Traditional treatment approaches have centered on weight loss, but data are limited on its long-term efficacy, and the overall compliance is poor. Recently, pioglitazone has been shown to be safe and effective in patients with NASH and may radically change our approach to the disease.
Still
, many aspects remain poorly understood. Taken together, wider use of new diagnostic methods and treatment approaches appears to signal the dawn of a new era in the management of NAFLD.
...
PMID:New diagnostic and treatment approaches in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). 1935 60
GH plays a major role in the regulation of lipid metabolism and alterations in GH axis elicit major changes in fat distribution and mobilization. For example, in patients with GH deficiency (GHD) or in mice lacking the GH receptor, the percentage of fat is increased. In addition to the direct actions of GH on lipid metabolism, current evidence indicates that ghrelin, a stomach-derived peptide hormone with potent GH secretagogue action, increases lipogenesis in white adipose tissue (WAT) through a hypothalamic-mediated mechanism.
Still
, the mechanism by which GH tone modulates ghrelin actions on WAT remains unclear. Here we investigated the effect of central ghrelin administration on lipid metabolism in lipogenic tissues (liver and WAT) in the absence of GH, by using a model for the study of GHD, namely the spontaneous dwarf rat, which shows increased body fat. Our data demonstrate that central chronic ghrelin administration regulates adipose lipid metabolism, mainly in a GH-independent fashion, as a result of increased mRNA, protein expression, and activity levels of fatty acid metabolism enzymes. On the contrary, central ghrelin regulates hepatic lipogenesis de novo in a GH-independent fashion but lipid mobilization in a GH-dependent fashion because carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 was decreased only in wild-type Lewis rats. These findings suggest the existence of a new central nervous system-based neuroendocrine circuit, regulating metabolic homeostasis of adipose tissue. Understanding the molecular mechanism underlying the interplay between GH and ghrelin and their effects on lipid metabolism will provide new strategies for the design and development of suitable drugs for the treatment of GHD,
obesity
, and its comorbidities.
...
PMID:Central ghrelin regulates peripheral lipid metabolism in a growth hormone-independent fashion. 1960 47
Since the 1960s, deep brain stimulation and spinal cord stimulation at low frequency (30 Hz) have been used to treat intractable pain of various origins. For this purpose, specific hardware have been designed, including deep brain electrodes, extensions, and implantable programmable generators (IPGs). In the meantime, movement disorders, and particularly parkinsonian and essential tremors, were treated by electrolytic or mechanic lesions in various targets of the basal ganglia, particularly in the thalamus and in the internal pallidum. The advent in the 1960s of levodopa, as well as the side effects and complications of ablative surgery (e.g., thalamotomy and pallidotomy), has sent functional neurosurgery of movement disorders to oblivion. In 1987, the serendipitous discovery of the effect of high-frequency stimulation (HFS), mimicking lesions, allowed the revival of the surgery of movement disorders by stimulation of the thalamus, which treated tremors with limited morbidity, and adaptable and reversible results. The stability along time of these effects allowed extending it to new targets suggested by basic research in monkeys. The HFS of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) has profoundly challenged the practice of functional surgery as the effect on the triad of dopaminergic symptoms was very significant, allowing to decrease the drug dosage and therefore a decrease of their complications, the levodopa-induced dyskinesias. In the meantime, based on the results of previous basic research in various fields, HFS has been progressively extended to potentially treat epilepsy and, more recently, psychiatric disorders, such as obsessive-compulsive disorders, Gilles de la Tourette tics, and severe depression. Similarly, suggested by the observation of changes in PET scan, applications have been extended to cluster headaches by stimulation of the posterior hypothalamus and even more recently, to
obesity
and drug addiction. In the field of movement disorders, it has become clear that STN stimulation is not efficient on the nondopaminergic symptoms such as freezing of gait. Based on experimental data obtained in MPTP-treated parkinsonian monkeys, the pedunculopontine nucleus has been used as a new target, and as suggested by the animal research results, its use indeed improves walking and stability when stimulation is performed at low frequency (25 Hz). The concept of simultaneous stimulation of multiple targets eventually at low or high frequency, and that of several electrodes in one target, is being accepted to increase the efficiency. This leads to and is being facilitated by the development of new hardware (multiple-channel IPGs, specific electrodes, rechargeable batteries).
Still
additional efforts are needed at the level of the stimulation paradigm and in the waveform. The recent development of nanotechnologies allows the design of totally new systems expanding the field of deep brain stimulation. These new techniques will make it possible to not only inhibit or excite deep brain structures to alleviate abnormal symptoms but also open the field for the use of recording cortical activities to drive neuroprostheses through brain-computer interfaces. The new field of compensation of deficits will then become part of the field of functional neurosurgery.
...
PMID:Functional neurosurgery for movement disorders: a historical perspective. 1966 Jun 68
Obesity
is becoming increasingly common, with at least 400 million obese adults worldwide and the World Health Organization (WHO) projecting that this statistic will reach 700 million in another five years. Ironically, despite the fact that a majority of adults in developed nations are overweight or obese, society stigmatizes the obese severely.
Still
, obese people have more than just social motivations for losing weight;
obesity
commonly goes hand in hand with life-threatening comorbidities like cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes and some forms of cancer. It severely threatens quality of life, limiting the ability to move and work, navigate public places, and provide care for others and is a factor in musculoskeletal disorders like osteoarthritis. Both
obesity
and its comorbidities lead obese patients to hospitals at greater rates than patients of normal weight, and these factors, along with social pressures, motivate patients and their physicians to pursue solutions for
obesity
, its comorbidities, or both.
...
PMID:Biomedical engineering and the obesity epidemic: treatments for weight reduction. 2017 18
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